So here we begin. I will create a list of possible activities for you to do, and it is up to you to decide what to do. With some concepts you may want to do two or three activities before you feel confident enough to move on - others may take more or less time. Keep working until you are SURE that you have understood the concept completely and are ready to be assessed. I would note that clicking around from one to the next before deciding on an activity will waste significant learning time. I will give a brief description and if you choose an activity I expect you to complete it.
Note: Do not expect every choice to blow your mind in terms of creativity and excitement (I can't make them ALL myself haha), but they will be LEARNING experiences and that is the key to success.
Also, I will make notes by the choices if they give you a chance to try a formative assessment. This is likely to be a quiz or test which allows you to see how you are progressing towards your target of mastery over the concept and gives you an opportunity to go back and revise or review areas where you are having difficulty. It is a really smart idea to perform a formative assessment of some kind before you take the final assessment for the unit, which we call summative assessment.
Capitalisation
First we need to go over the rules and then we will look at different applications of them. Here are the words that need a capital:
First word in a sentence
Proper nouns, including people, cities, holidays, organizations, and places like “Bob and Mary live in the Pacific Northwest and celebrate Christmas there.”
The pronoun “I”
Days and months of the year
Proper adjectives like French or African
Words used as names and titles, like Mom and General Lee.
The first word used when opening or closing a letter, like Dear friends or Yours truly
The main words in a title, like Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince or Little House on the Prairie.
Historical events, eras, or documents like the Declaration of Independence or the Stone Age
Letters and abbreviations that stand for names or organizations, like J. K. Rowling or the NHS (National Humane Society)
Excellent, informative site intended for adult English language learners, which includes a factsheet with information about capitalisation, games to consolidate and quizzes which you can do as formative assessment.
Rewrite the following text with capital letters (could be formative):
the lazy queen in a faraway land, there lived a very lazy queen named suzie. she loved to drink pepsi, eat lays potato chips and twinkies, and watch the movie toy story. she never exercised and soon got too big to walk into her favorite place, wanda’s wonderful world of wonder. on tuesday, queen suzie wanted to attend the celebration of her country’s victory over veggieland, called spoiling day. she called to bob and juan and said, “i order you to bring a scooter for me." they got the scooter and she was off. naturally, she won the contest and got the all you can eat in ten minutes award. Answers: http://www.yourdictionary.com/grammar/capitalization/teaching-capitalization.html
This is a document about capitalisation for university students (see, even they struggle with it!). This makes for interesting reading for those wanting a bit more of a challenge with this level.
Miss Sear, do you need to do all the activities? - Not at all! Just as many as you need to do to feel confident for the test! :) Miss S
THIS IS AWESOME!!!
I think it's awesome as well ~ Emily
this thing is da bomb
From Lukey B
like it to.
Seamus.
I do not think it awesome it
WALTER SAYS HELLO
Bridget thinks this is good
*Thomas was here; CAKE!*
penguin fact: penguins are Kool as Kats!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Note: Do not expect every choice to blow your mind in terms of creativity and excitement (I can't make them ALL myself haha), but they will be LEARNING experiences and that is the key to success.
Also, I will make notes by the choices if they give you a chance to try a formative assessment. This is likely to be a quiz or test which allows you to see how you are progressing towards your target of mastery over the concept and gives you an opportunity to go back and revise or review areas where you are having difficulty. It is a really smart idea to perform a formative assessment of some kind before you take the final assessment for the unit, which we call summative assessment.
Capitalisation
First we need to go over the rules and then we will look at different applications of them. Here are the words that need a capital:
ACTIVITIES:
ttp://www.bbc.co.uk/skillswise/e3/words/grammar/capitalletters/index.shtml
Excellent, informative site intended for adult English language learners, which includes a factsheet with information about capitalisation, games to consolidate and quizzes which you can do as formative assessment.
Rewrite the following text with capital letters (could be formative):
the lazy queen
in a faraway land, there lived a very lazy queen named suzie. she loved to drink pepsi, eat lays potato chips and twinkies, and watch the movie toy story. she never exercised and soon got too big to walk into her favorite place, wanda’s wonderful world of wonder. on tuesday, queen suzie wanted to attend the celebration of her country’s victory over veggieland, called spoiling day. she called to bob and juan and said, “i order you to bring a scooter for me." they got the scooter and she was off. naturally, she won the contest and got the all you can eat in ten minutes award.
Answers: http://www.yourdictionary.com/grammar/capitalization/teaching-capitalization.html
This is a document about capitalisation for university students (see, even they struggle with it!). This makes for interesting reading for those wanting a bit more of a challenge with this level.
This site has a good section for practicing capitalisation which is a bit more challenging as it also asks about punctuation. Please note: this is an American website so the word 'period' is used to mean 'full stop'.
http://www.harcourtschool.com/activity/language_arts/pmp/interactive_guide/g03/g03home.htm
A capitalisation & punctuation quiz-style game:
http://www.eduplace.com/cgi-bin/hme-quiz-directions.cgi?Grade=5&Unit=5&Topic=Capitalization+and+Punctuation
This is AWESOME! Anyone else think so?
- Millie
Miss Sear, do you need to do all the activities? -
Not at all! Just as many as you need to do to feel confident for the test! :) Miss S
THIS IS AWESOME!!!
I think it's awesome as well
~ Emily
this thing is da bomb
From Lukey B
like it to.
Seamus.
I do not think it awesome it
WALTER SAYS HELLO
Bridget thinks this is good
*Thomas was here; CAKE!*
penguin fact: penguins are Kool as Kats!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!